• . / I ' ‘.. • al ' ( 1 I' --7,44,z0- ,-.4316..,.., 4i - ' II ' • . , di 4 ~ ...4, su. . • 4.- .s 7. . ''. 4, , .c....., • F5i......••.1..0..•• , - -.. MM. VOL, 11.---NO. 18. THE READING DAILY EAGLE L 5 PUBLISHED DAILY BY RITTER & CO., i AT NO. 542 PENN STREET. , :p.3 PRINTING Tho Proprietors of tlin Daily Eagle and Weekly oilsotto, A.IIE PRFIPA l IIIM ri l o DO ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK PROMPTLY,' NEATLY ANIY AT FAIR PRICES! Having Amplo facilities and g workmen thoy aro enabled to e cute every variety of printing sired by MERCHANTS, MECHANICS, ANY BUSINESS MEN, SUCK AS Books, Pamphlets, Catalogues, Posters, Handbills, Programmes, Wool are, Legal Blank., Nolo, Receipts, • Bill-Heads, Letter-Heads, Rail Cards, Bills of fare, Wedding Cards, Businetis Cards, &0., Wo tiro confidont that all work entrusted to dB will dono antis. factorily to tho customer both as to 6 tylo and price. • Our personal and political friends are reminded that tlloy can mate rially aid us, without any disstd vantago to thomeolves, by.giving 14 their patronage in this lino. Orders by express or mail will ft be promptly executed. Address RITTER & CO.. DA/Lt Alain AND GAZETTE OFFICE 542 Penn Street, Reading, Pa. pa NATIONAL PODIUMN AND HOLLOW-WANN NM OF THT airy or RAVADING. D. C. SCHNADER, 414 PENN STREET, • Would .13111 the attention of the publie to his large stook of Parlor. Ofase and Cooking Miry, Ranges, Tin, Hollowware and Reuse keep nig goods of every desorlPilon. Rooting and Spouting promptly attended to at the lowest prim Oire,bim a all. • fob 18-Otd 11l MOLINO MILL ItESTAUIII.I 4 a, 919 North Moth Street. ABRAHAM STOUT, PROPRIETOR. Choice WinOS and Eatables on hand also, a good stook of Ales and Lager Boor. Lunch every day. All friends aro invi• ted Weal!. A few boarders can accommodated with good board. Uan 21-11nd ENGINE BOILER FOR SALE. EMI IMPORTANT TO MACHINISTS, MANUFACTURERS.' 1 ,~ Lables, The undersigned offer for sale, at:rea sonable rates, . ONE OSCILLATING ENGINE OF FOUR HORSE POWER. ONE MORT-HORSE ILI TUBULAR UP. RIGHT BOM. Apply at the ADLER Office, addriea INNER ♦ND IA.,VD 3 ~ RITTER ..fic CO, Azinnta. r&. "FOR THE GOOD THAT LACKS ASSISTANCE: ton THE NIONG'THAT NEEDS.RESISTANCE." READING, PA., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY' 18, 189. FfNOINE AND BOILER FOR RALF.-111- PORTANT TO MACHINISTS AND MkNUFACTURERS. The undersigned offer (or sale at reasonable rates, one Os cillating Engine of foer-Rorse Power. and one Efght-It orse Tubular Uprlgbt Roller. Apply at the ADLRR, Mee, or ad d CO RITTER feb 17-wd.) Reading, Pa. - $lO 11F. a Vir s 1 4 09 11X: ; — fe A w d ti o a n , b a l fi e bir w r °Ac e d Gun ins_ to this eit; from th e far g m'of James 8, 11M. The above 'toward THIS e OF F ICE. by leaving the same at OFFICE. lob OR SALE.—WiII be sold at Private Sale. F tho Stock of J. RODGERS' BARBER SHOP, with appurtenances. at No. 255 Penn street, Reading. Sold on aeoount of going into Other business. ' (fob 11 d K RYDER & CO., Manufacturers of DR. BREyER'S Oelebrated Tonics Herb Bitters. • , Importer of WINES AND LIQUORS. Also Sole Agents for BAILITI3 UKRIVALLID No. 121 Borth iihird Street, PHILADELPHIA. Poe sale at the Eagle Bookstore. • aug CLOTHES WRINGERS, STEP L.ADT) ERS, ALL WARRANTBD, AT ' AP KNIGHTS' HARDWARE '.STORE THIRD 4WD PENN S 7 S. our 10 BOOTS AND SHOES FOR THE PEOPLE. THE BEST AND CHEAPEST I REINHOLD & SOHOENER No. 41 North Sixth Street, ABADINGW;I'A. i 'y' • rIPHE SUBSURIBBRS 'HAVE JUST EBTAB -1 ilshed a first-olass Boot and Shoe-making establishment and , , Moro at the above stated place, whore tboyi ern able to accommodate customers with the beet artioles in their lino of business, and at tower prices than at any other plea° in the city. • The following list of prioos proves all we say : Mon's calf boots, $4.00 and upwards. Men's kip boots, $3 00 Men's working shoes: 1 60 Men's French calf Congress gaiters,boz to es. 3 90 Men's calf Cbn gross gaiters, 225 Min's calf Balmorais, 2 00 Men's kip Balmorals, 160 Boys' calf lialMorals, 10 Boys' kip Balmbrale. 1 25 Youths' kip Balmorale i 1 00 Women's la tang high Polih. 276 Women's aingress gaiters, 75 to 260 Women's lasting Balmorals, 100 Women's Morocco Balmorals. 2 00 Women's Morocco shoes, 1 66 Women's kid slippers, 65 Misses' lasting Polish, 145 Youths' gaiters from 15 eta, to 75 Youths' and boys' shoes from 30 eta. to 90 Also, a large stook of notions on hand and for sale. The above prioes are lower than at any other similar plane of business in the city. REPAIRING. Particular attantion Is Paid to all kinds of repairing. REINHOLD & SOMENER, NO. 41 NORTH SIXTH STREET, (ABM! 11111 COURT BOUM) READING, PA. -prllll McGowan & Miltimore, ‘• DEALERS IS HARDW,ART, I CUTLERY, GM, ROME rIIRNIMING GOODE!. - ETAL S I , • • .TIN PLOTS, SHSET IRON, Building Materials, 13ADDERY, &0., &0., &0., &u. No. 612 PENN STReET, READIXO, PA. bp 24- RBADINQ a COLUMBIA RAILROAD, tammiliglin On and'afterThurs day, Nov. road enger , , tilli;s will run this road RS follows: Loave Reading at - 7.00 A. 'M. It • II ilg 6.15 P. lit Arrive at Lancaster at, 9.15 A. M. " " Columbia at 0.25 A. 8.. " " Lancaster at B.V$ P. M. " " Columbia nt 8.50 P. M. RETURNING : Leave Lancaster & Columbia at 8.00 A, M. " Columbia at 8.20 P. M. " Lancaster at ' SSA P. M. Arrive at Reading at 10:20 A. M. " at Reading at MO P, M, Trains Nos. 2 and 4 make close connec tion t at Reading with trains Ninth and South, on the Philadelphia and Reading' Railroad, and West on the Lebanon Valley Road. No. 2 also snakes close connection with train for New York. Tickets can bo obtained at the (Aces of the Now Jersey Central E. R. foot of Li b -. erty street, Now York,"and Phila. & Road ing R. R., Thirteenth and Callowhill Ste., Philadelphia. Through Tickets to New York and Phil adelphia, sold at all the brincipal stations and baggage chocked through, Trains arc run byPhiladelphia and Read ing Railroad time, which is ten minutes tutor than Pennsylvania It: R. Time. GEORGE F. GAGE, Superintendent. E. P. Mums, atm. Frt. & Ticket Agent. fob 18.-lni PHILA. AND READING RAILROAD IVIN TER ARE ANOMIE/Yr anliniM T O R M A7NI B SE NG" Dioitmnas 14Th, 1868. • FIVE. TRAINS DOWN TO PIIILADEL .PIII 6., passing Reading, at 7.80, pm and 11.15 A. let., anti 4.25 and 6.35 P. M. UP TO POTTSVILLE, at 10.33 A. M., and 5.50,and 6.00 P. M. 15 TRAINS WEST TO jApp.ioll & HARRIS BUBO. Western Express from Now-York, at 1.05 A. M, and 1.50 P. M. and 10.19 P. •M. Harrisburg Accommodation Train at 7.15 A. M. and Mali Trains at 10.45 A. M., and 0.05 P. M. On Sunday, the down trains pass stead• lag Kt 9,40 A. M. and 4.25 P. Di., and up trains at 10.60 A. !Could 5.571. M. The 4.9.0 P. M. down, and 10.16 A. 211, up trains, run only between Philadelphia and Read 'Up Up trains loavo Philadelphia for Reading, Harrisburg and Pottsvillo at 7,80 and 8.15 A. 2•1412.80 noon, and 8,80 P. hl. I and at 4.45 P. 11. for Reading only. The 8.15 A. M. train connects with trains for Tamaqua, Wil liamsport, Elmira, Buffalo, Niagara and Canada. The 8.15 A. M., and 8.30 P. M. 'up trains from Philadelphia, and 10.85 A. M., and 4.20 P. M. down trains. stop only at principal sta tionS below Rending. Reading Accommodation Train : Leaves Reading at 7.80 A. M. returning from Phil. adolphia at 4.45 P. M. ;t The Pottstown Acteenribodtion train leaves Pottstown at 0.45 A. hi. Returning leaves Philadelphia at 4.00 P. 7J. • The Western Exp_ress trains connect at Harrisburg with )If,xpress trains on the Pennsylvania Railroad foritaltimore,Pitts burgh wid all points West and the 10.45 Mali train connects at Harrisburg for Pitts burgh, Lancaster,Chambersburg, Sunbury, Scranton, Pittston, Willcosbarre, Williams port, Lock Haven, Elmira and the Cana. das. Passenger trains leave Upper Depot for Ephrata, hrata, Litiz Columbia and Lancaster at 7.00 A. M. and 6.151'. M. M Through First-Class Coupon Ticketsand Emigrants) tickets at reduced Fares, to all the principal poiate 'nth° North,West and the l)anadas. COMMUTATION TICKETS, With 26 Convent!, at 25 per cont, dis count, between any* points desired. MILEAGE TICKETS, . Good for 2000 miles, between all points, At $52 00—for families and business firing. MASON /WHETS, (food for the holdor only, tor 3, 6, 9 and 12 months, between all points, at reduced Fares. School Season Tickets Oho-third less than the above. lifir Passengers ;will take the Express trains West at the UPPER, DEPOT, and all other trains at the LOWER or OLD DEPOT. 100 pound Baggage allowed each passen ger.. • Passengers aro requested to purchase their tickets before entering the ears, as higher fares are charged if paid irr the oars. Excursion Tickote,good for one day, by 7.80 A. M. Accommodation Train to Phil adelphia, and return, at $266 each. O. A. NICOLLR, May 23) (4 enoral BuDorintondont. E AST PENNA. RAILROAD ARRANGEMENT OF I'ASSENGEIt TRAINS, Commencing Monday, Derember2lai, 1808. a No 6, Mail Train, lagiime.v. Reading 10 :P); A. M. arrives Allentown 12.05; at. New York .3.5 e, P. M. No. 7 Fast Mail, leaves Reading at 4.20 P. M.' arrives at Allentown 5.55 i at Now York 10.65, P. M. Nos. 5 and 7, run daily, except Sunday, stopping at all Way _Stations between Reading and New York. EXPRESS TRAINS: Leave Reading at 46 46 15.44 A. M. 7.31 A. M. It 2.28 A. M. 1.00 A.-M. Arrivo at Npw York at MOO A. M. I 6 if VIM A. M. • 'I IS II 7.001'. M. II 4 I 6.15 A. M. Those trains run through from Fitts. burgh to New-York, without change of cars, stoppin only at Lyons, Allentown, Bethlehem, g aston aanetion, Clinton, White House, Somerville, Round Brook, Plainfield and Elizabeth. • 1 The 5.41 A. .?,1„ train runs daily except Sundays anti Mondays. The 2.28 P.. M. trains run daily except Sundays. The 7.31 A. M. and Lee A. .51.,trains run daily. West bound trains, leave Nqw-York, at the foot of Liberty street, as followe : Lend NEW York. Arrive al Reading. 12.00 M. Mail No. 6, 6.00 P. ,tl, 9.00 A. M. Express Train, 11.30 P. M. 5.10 P . M. "Express m o ' 8.60 P. M. Express 'in, 1.00 A. ht. Mail Train leavin - Allentown at 7.20, A. M., stops at all li t 'y Stations, arriving at Reading nt 9.10, A. M., running daily except Sundays. The 12 M. Train from Now York, stops at - all Stations between New. York and Beading, leaving Allentown at 4.20, P. M., arriving , at Beading at 6.00, P, M., run , fling daily except Sundays. The 8.00 P. M. train from ' New York, runs daily stopping - at Elizabeth, Plain field, Sommerville, Junction, Easton, and Bethlehem, arriving at Allentown at 11.45, P. M,, passing Lyons at 12.29,A. M., arriv ing at, Reading at 1.00 A. N. • Passengers aro requested to purchase. tickets before entering the cars, s 25 Ms extra will be charged and collected on the train from all who pay the fare to the Conductor. COMMUTATION TICKETS, good for Twenty-bix Trips, at 2.3 per Cont, diSeount between any points desired. MILEAGE TICKET BOOKS for 9000 miles, good between_ all points on this or the Philadelphia ik i lleading R. 2 1 5 or the Reading- Columbi R. 11., at $3 sash for Karnlfieb and firm . • , SEASONLTICKETS, good for the holder only, 'for three, six, nine and twelve months, at reduced ;ides. • P. M. EEMENTROUT. Jan 2-tf 1 ' General Ticket Aunt. ILL RI MOVE — t OUT DIY ttlarikeri" iktua ,„.., AND PRY GOODS, in order to mopen an entire new and well selected stock, at .NO. 317 PENN STREET. .BETWEEN THIRD AND FOURTH, where I will pay particular attention to keep all the latest styles df LADIESP,MIBSEB , AND CATIADREN 7 B HAT AND DON LT FRAMES, '\ and a complete assortment of everything ,ertaining to the Millinery•and Tdmmtng Pine. I express toy moat hearty thanks for past favors, and vary respectfully solleit the contiumanoo of the. saute. EatisfactiOn guaranteed. • fah wind • up, 0. B. 8EL7,44i, For tho Daily Eagle. TO MAOOIE. IN Dl%. JOHN SIIII,IIM Stllt waiting for thee! Still waiting for thee Thinking, dear Maggio, while sadly 1 roam ; Oh what a pleasure—how sweet it would be, To rest in thy bosom, thy heart for my home. San 10110111, for thee Still longing ,for thee! Pleading with Heavon while sadly 1 roam ; Tolling my Savior—how sweet it would be, To dwell with thoe,alway, thy heart for my home. Still dreaming of t h ey I Still dreaming of thee! Counting tho moments while sadly I • roam ; Wondering, sweet Maggie, how long it will bp, Beforo thou wilt give me thy heart for my home. c) A PLEA FOR TIRE PRIVATES IN TUE ARMY. A 'shocking flistOry of Starvation, Rascality and Vraad. The New York Tribune publishes th e ' following editorially :I It has been claimed for the officers of the Regular Army that their training en abled them to 'take exceptionally good care of their soldiers. ' All through the war we heard of the neglect and the ig mimeo in filial regard of the volunteer officers, and of the attentive care of the regulars. Now' that members having some regard for the impoverished Trea• fluty are striving to economize in the ex penditeres of the War Departnient, we are warned that we must at any rate keep a great horde of useless oflicora in corn. mission, because their training will make them especially valeablo in taking charge of recruits whenever necessity shall again require the enlargement, of the army. We demur. Such samples as we have seen of the perforniande of some of these officers leads to the belief that the service will be benefitted quite as much by weed ing them out as by any other reduction. There lies before us the .story of one soldier's experience at the hands of regu lar army officers. Some of its features may be of special interest to honorable members ,who NO it indispensable to the good of the army that we should keep in service a half more officers than we want, because they aro all so very good, and faithful, and attentive that, in an emergency we could not possibly fill places. This young man enlisted in one of the new infantry regiments, some two years ago, and was sent to the redezvous of re cruits at Governor's Inland.. Here came his first experience of a soldier's life : "I was astonished at the small amount of food given to usi - All we received for dinner was about four ounces of bread, half an ounce of pork, and half a pint of soup. Sometimes wo received far less than that. For supper we got a little bit of bread and coffee, and nothing else. We recruits were half starved, and con tinually tempted to try to steal ono an• other's rations." Yet the Government, whose soldier was thus welcomed to its service, provides the most liberal rations allowed in any army in Christendom I Abundant dinners were paid for at Gover nor's Island—what reached the recruit was " half an ounce of pork, half a pint of soup, and four ounces, of bread!" The rest was supposed to be saved by the considerate officers for the,benefit ef, the " company fund"—the '•theory, oti its face, being to starve the soldiers in health that they might havh hospital delicacies when sick. The misfortune in this par ticular regiment was that the hospital delicacies never came in, while the - slam ation was uniform. Finally the corn mandler here got ready to start West„,with recruits, and rations for the journey' were accordingly issued, These aoldi4rs had enjoyed the advantage of being under the command of, regular offieers to so full an extent, that they were ?ow half-starved and wholly ravenous. Some gorged themselves at once on the unwonted plenty, and were presently sick. All had lost the power of self-control to such an extent that the rations were soon:devour ed ; and long before they reached Omaha, after stealing from the sick and from the more providept everything that was left, they 'were absolutely destitute. With armed men moving through a rich and peaceful country, what followed may be readily conjectured. "When the train stopped, many • of us would go to the houses of citizens and begil63nething to cat, and often take it by force, In marching through the streets of Chicago in broad daylight, one of my comrades'left the ranks and tore a piece of pie from the bands of a little girl about seven years of age. 'ln'going through 'olive, at the different stations the men would leave the cars and rob the houses close by of whatever food they could ay their hands on. One evening tword, r or thirty of us went to a goad looking house whose inhabitants were at their supper. On knocking, the door was opened, and in the soldiers rushed, like a parcel of famished wolvei. The table was pretty well laden with • provi diens, but they aeon releived it or its burden. There - was a largo joint of roast beef on the table. A llutdunatt grabbed it, bat it was hot and burned Out, so he dropped it. An Iritihrnan, hoitever, was equal to the occasion. Ho stripped off his blouse, wrapped it around tho beef, and bore it off in triumph. Although I stole nothing, I was not hungry that night." After a series of such exhibitions by U. S. soldiers, our recruits got fairlyi started up the MiSsouri. Here they far ed a little better at first, but soon re lapsed into the old condition.: "But what troubled us most, the ofli.'• cars picked out the best °Pour rations end fold tholu to the cook or attain of the steamboat. As wo were little better titan half-starved, you may imagine 'the state of our feelings when we 'saw our barrels of pork and hard tack, or boxes full of our best biscuits, taken from be• fore our eyes and sold to put money in the officers' pockets. One day our .steamboat passed another laden with soldiers. The cooks of the different steamboats exchanged compliments, and almost the first words they said were, Tow. much did, you make off the sal diere?' They thou stated the number of barrels of pork, tind'boxes of hard-tack, and pounds of sugar, coffee and beans they had bought from the officers. They spoke, too, in tones Which showed that they cared little . who heard them. Owing to the best °qui-, rations being picked out and said, what we now got to eat was horrible. Biscuits were green and blue inside, and full of dead maggots. It wits a common eight to see as many as 100 soldiers at one time picking the dead vermin out of Iheir biscuits. Tho pork wo received was'beyond description. 11 seemed to have been kept as long asit would hold together. Ilad‘we not been so hungry, we' could never have eaten it. Yet, bad as they were, the objections wore nearly all to quantity, not to quali ty. Any Ordinary man of us could ensi ly have eaten 12 to 1,4 of the buscuits ie a day; yet all we weie allowed was three or four in a day. Some ( clays we got bean soup, and some of Our men never got a single beau in their allowance of soup, Being thus starved, we used to beg and steal from the negro crew of the boat. Men, who but a few days ago were violent in their denunciations Qf niggers, Abolitionists, Republicans, &e., now begged from negroes a morsel of food to keep themselves from starving. They did not 'always beg it 'though. Sometimes, when the ilogroes were sit ting .down-to dinner,' 20 or 80 soldiers would rush in among the astonished At !loans and mak% a dash at the dinner." And so the story goes on, fee page after page, relating sales of fodd from, under the hungry eyes of the soldiers, to Indiana, to steamboat people, to immi grants, and finally to the soldiers thou selves ! Of course the transparent pre tence for all this was the sating for the company and regimental funds ? These famishing soldiers only complained be. !cause it was second nature to, complain.: They were hungry only because they wore gluttonous. The theory of a company fund is that the rations sold to make' it ; up shall ho such as the men do nut need; l and who should be as good judges of what the men do need as their educated and accomplished regularr - officers ? per recruit pays his respect to this theory after a blunt, soldier's cushion "I assert that the man who causes the abolition of company funds, will do more for the benefit of the regular soldier than all the reformers that over sat in Congress. • If any company of soldiers think that a company fund would ho of benefit to them, they alWays have it in their power to make one by subscribing among themselves, and if the use made of their money does not please them, they have the' remedy in their own hands— namely, 'not to sujneribe. But under the present system4hey are plundered in 'the moat barefaced,• shameful manner. I'hear'd that there eamenn order limiting company funds to $OO: It never affect ed ne any, for the officers kept on selling our rations, and we kept on starving as usual. When Uncle Suin goes to the enormous expense of transporting pro. visieins out en the Plains to feed his gel diers, I canoot see why 'an officer -should hollowed: to sell those provisions on any pretence whatever. Surely common sense may toll any' ono that the system of Allowing every company commander to sell his company's rations whenever he pleases, - must end in 'fraud and cop rupOn, for who is to know how much he ',lolls? There is, in reality, no protection fbr the soldier against heing robbed of his rations. If ho complains to the cooks, they aro likely to scald him or kick Mtn out of the cook-house; if he complirins to an officer he , will get sent to the guardhouse, tied np s by the wrists or thumbs, or have a ball arid chain put on him for growling." The soldier who went through two years of this sort of thing is not: without his notions as to the proper remedy. Congressmen whose -specific for the army is the Mention of a great crowd of uselesfroffieers, because they are go ad. mirably qualified for their . work,may Still And it suggestive : "There,his been a good degl said and written lately about the causes of de sertion sa i d the remedy for it. I assert that the cause of desertion out on the frontier, in tho Icrritories, or on the 10 CENTS PER WEEK, Plains, is poisotiing with bad rations and starving with scantT,ones. I have spoken to my deserters, nutlasked them the rea son they deserted, and judging from their answers and my own experience, I be lieve that almost every cause of diner• tion can be traced to bad anti scanty ra tiet& I see some tnembeys of Congress believe that if the pay of the soldiers was i i neressed it would stop desertion. This idea is simply ridiculous. Soldiers have more pay noW than they any good use of. Nine•tenths of them spend their money in drunkenness, gambling and debauche'ry.- I think I can toll them how to benefit the soldier. First: Let every ()dicer caught selling his men's rations be severely punished. :top the Help of Soldiers' rations at the different Wittier posts, and allow none to be sold ou any pretence whatever, Second: Lot there be in every company weightivales and measures, solhat . if a soldier - thinks ho has not got a fait ration he can take it up niulluive it weighed and measured. Let it be understood that every soldier has the right to do this ; also, let it be understood that if a soldier objects to the quality of his ration, that ho has the right to bring it to 'the doctor, and that it is the doctor's duty to examine it, and, if unlit for human food, to condemn it, nnd order the soldier another ration." • ► We have preferred to confine . ' this elt• hibit to a single class of abtities' in the army on the frontier. There is asicken ing list of others, only too well, authenti cated in individual cases. Soldiers ro still tied up by the thumbs in spite oho Congressional ' prohibition, nrun on 1 (, Officers have tried to shoot men who n- gored them. Mutinies have been pro relied by long continued abuse. Steam- boats have been ordered out from under the protection of a fort's guns, at night, in th) Indian couhtry, because of their refusal to sell whisky. Men enlisted for 801(10 are employed as laborers. These -- ciisqt may not be general—we trust they aro not: i- But wo insist that enough is known to warrant a thormigh prunin g of the Army Register. A judicious muster : out of ono third' of Otesek officers ou g ht. to leave a body having fewer members capable of such, enormities. We believe in taking care of the army; but the first men in it to command our synipathy are the men in the ranks. —France Gal a million Beadier& —Chicago packed 607,064 .hogs this season. —Florida is luxuriating on ripe water. melons. pin manufacturing company in Connecticut manufaCturing nearly Nem millions of pins per day. ' —A. family:At Snow Hill. Maryland, has lost five or its members by (Brotherly. during threo *eeks. —Peonage is reported to still exist in tirizona and New l'itexico,, although it is —Beaton has a milk inspector s and hi• operations have materially improved the quality of tho milk sold there. —The huge ox General Grant line been reprieved. Ins tead of being killed he ia to end his days on General Grange farm near St. Loma. '—Some physiciane of New York have' men recently - advocating the renewal of he ancient custom of burning the dead nstend of burying them. —The West is puzzled about tho Hutchinson family. Various detachments are travelling in different quarterc.oach claiming to be the "only genuine" lot. —There was a deadly combat recently in Florida between six men : thief) broth. era oil each side. Two weip , hilled, on `each aide.. Thb' dispute arose abOnt some hoge. i . I A ~. • --Tho jailor s of 'Cumberland :,count, Vs:, got lost at night, and was yo'bbod by threo men. _ No will probably search the follows_some time. —The Rev. Mr. Shorthill, a Baptiat preacher, and a Mrs.gclkett, etdding at Penn -- utawneythe . I nne a fat. er and husband, and the other a wif and moth. er—fixed up a Mlle bit of 'an elopement the other day and put out for- the west, with the injured husband in pursuit. —Edwnrd Divers, aged 104 yeais,dien on the oth inst., at his residence id Derry township, Westmoreland county. (3mall•pox is adding to the honer of ho famine in India. —A cotemporary thinks the rain a strange power. It keeps thousands away from the church on Sum*, hat won't deter a single man from attending to his business on a week day. —There lre now at work in the Meth, odist Episcopal Chureh, 7180 itinerant ministers. —The Ex-Queen Tsalella, of Spaini is helping the insurgents in their war against the Provisional Government. —France is still preparing for war. —The Lehigh Valley railroad is to be relaid with steel rails the wholedistanes t from Easton to Mauch Chunk. —The German nobility, and the Cath °lice, and Conservatives of Vienna are greatly incensed with the Emperor, be cause be has included'in his last appoint ment to the House of Peers three repre sentatives of the trade and commerce of the country, and one Jew. --The pasEage of ei bill in thirty•foor tninutea, at liarrieburg. ) a 80111011 paper calla "leialatiou on the high pronoun) principle."